Thursday 7 February 2019

Bard Spells

Do bards really know what they're doing? Do they even 100% know they're 'doing magic?' I mean, being around them is magical, so...

Bards don't really 'cast' spells or 'use' magic. Magic is just something that happens around them- sometimes in response to their art, sometimes because the whims of fate smiles upon them.

FIRST-LEVEL BARD SPELLS

Animal Friendship: Self-explanatory: The animal is just friends with you now!
Bane - works as written, some reality-warping plus demoralizing
Charm Person - being around a bard is kinda like this anyway. Might accidentally cast this on someone you're just trying to talk to.
Comprehend Languages through gestures, expressions, etc, you are able to communicate pretty well with any creature.
Cure Wounds - Awww, see? Just a scratch! You'll live to fight another day old chap!
Detect Magic - 'I got a feeling something weird is going on' - plus instead of school of magic, they'll know genre of story- horror, fairy, religious, epic, etc etc
Disguise Self - poorly-improvised disguise works unrealistically well.
Faerie Fire - I dunno, actual faeries show up? Maybe scrap it.
Feather Fall: You fall at normal speed, but something miraculously breaks your fall- water, a pile of hay, etc. Somehow, you take NO damage, even if the thing breaking your fall should only, at best, cushion it. On falls over a hundred feet, make a Con save to avoid being knocked unconscious. Maybe you land on a ledge?
Healing Word - 'you got this!'
Heroism - you describe to someone how cool they are, and they believe you
Hideous Laughter - you tell a particularly hilarious joke
Identify - probably a lucky guess, plus remembering something you read in a book one time
Illusory Script - You're just super good at writing in code and innuendo
Longstrider - probably scrap this just 'cuz it's so boring
Silent Image - ugh. I WANT bards to have illusion magic. Maybe they just know a little bit of actual, intentional magic? Or maybe it works by people misinterpreting things that are already there- a bundle of sticks in the corner becomes a horrifying monster, etc. Maybe the bard makes a supernaturally realistic painting out of improvised materials.
Sleep -  Can't be cast in, but basically works retroactively- for example, guards have a better-than-average chance of being asleep ALREADY when you try to sneak by.
Speak with Animals - He says he likes me better :)
Thunderwave - You shred a riff SO AGGRO it sends opponents staggering backwards clutching their ears
Unseen Servant - also kinda boring


To be clear, this IS all magic- it can be dispelled, countered, etc. It's not even that hard to notice necessarily, especially if it KEEPS HAPPENING. It just doesn't really originate from the bard, like a wizard storing spells in their skull, it more like originates AROUND the bard- like a big puppy following them around. At higher levels, the magic becomes more overtly... magic. And the cross-class spells the Lore bard gets (in 5e) are just that- wizard spells, sorcerer spells, etc, and are cast as such.

Monday 4 February 2019

Mystic: GLOG class

I've been sitting on this post for awhile, but Goblin Punch's recent post has me spooked since he mentioned publishing a cleric class, and I don't want this to be TOTALLY redundant when posted. So I'm posting it now, even though some of the spells aren't written up yet- I;ll fix it up later ;)

Religion comes up a lot in my games. There are small gods running around in everyone's business, there's the far-reaching power of the Church. My players love shouting 'praise
Zulin' (even the tree-worshipper, I guess he does it ironically?)

But if I'm going to eventually trick them into playing the GLOG, I'll have to have a good 'cleric' type ruleset. Plus, it seems like one of the major projects for that design space that's not a solved game. Hopefully it will prove to eventually be as useful and adaptable as Skerples' wizard rework
As well as the abovementioned and linked blogs, this owes inspiration to Last Gasp Grimoires mystic, although my version is a little more... restrained.


Mystic Class

Starting skills and equipment vary by the mystic's Religion

Starting Equipment: chainmail, shield, mace, holy symbol
Starting Skill: [d3]: 1. History, 2. Scripture, 3. Commerce
A: +1 Faith, Miracles, Religion

B: +1 Faith, -1 Doubt
C: +1 Faith, -1 Doubt
D:  -1 Doubt
, Divine Inspiration


You also gain a +1 to Save vs Unholy and +1 HP for every two Cleric templates you possess.

Your faith is represented by d8s, similar to a wizards spellcasting dice. Faith dice do not deplete on rolls of 1 or 2. Your Doubt is represented by d6s. There are four of these at first level, with one being removed for each additional template gained, as shown on the above table. When you make a spellcasting roll to invoke a miracle, you roll as many Faith dice as you would like to invest, and all of your Doubt together. Doubt does not contribute to the result of the spell, it only exists to trigger doubles and triples. On a double, the spell fails, and the mystic gains an additional point of doubt. On a triple, the mystic has been Forsaken.

Excess Doubt can be removed with prayer, fasting, and other rituals, which takes at least an hour for each point of doubt to be removed.

Design note: This is the basic mechanic, which I'm most proud of. I'm awful at estimating probability curves, but if FEELS like it shouldn't be too much less/more powerful than the wizard's spellcasting method, and it should be different enough that it won't be a strictly better/worse situation even if it's a little off. 

Miracles

When you pray, your god sends you miracles in the form of spells to help you over the next day. You get one miracle per mystic template you have. Your god picks them, not you, so roll for what you get randomly, unless it's extremely obvious what you'll need (water walk if you're planning on crossing a river). You can petition for specific miracles by making a meditation check, offering a sacrifice, etc. You can always choose to take one of your religion's domain spells, instead of one of the spells you roll. 

You can also use scrolls, wands, etc, the same as a wizard. Arcane and divine magic are effectively interchangeable, once they're in item form. Mystics tend to have prayer beads and other more religiously-themed tools, but they work the same.

Design notes: I'm not 100% on the rando thing, but I *do* like the idea of preventing players taking 20 minutes deciding on their spells. Probably at the table, I'd let them pick whatever they wanted to a certain extent, as long as they had it off the top of their head- as soon as they start reading, I start rolling


Forsaken: When a mystic pushes their god too far, demands too much, they may be abandoned by their god. When this happens, they cannot cast mystic spells until they have won or wormed their way back into their god's good graces (or found another religion). The method of regaining favour varies by religion, but it should be no small task, and in some rare cases may be impossible if the god is really fed up. In addition, every time a mystic is Forsaken, they gain a point of Madness.


Design note: I like the idea of cleric's occasionally getting fed up and switching gods. I think some religions will have slightly more 'attractive' rites, or maybe signing bonuses, to encourage conversion. 
also, I want to facilitate moments where priests are falling on their knees screaming at the heavens 'why hast thou forsaken me' and this seems a step in the right direction

Religions: As a mystic, you belong to a religion or tradition. One is detailed here, the Priest of the Authority. More to follow.

If you switch religions, you gain a permanent point of doubt. This doesn't stack, so once you've bailed on one religion, you can just keep doing it! Probably don't tell anyone though, it'll make you seem less trustworthy

This makes conversion LESS attractive. I guess I like the idea of players having to weigh these sorts of choices

Your religion determines what miracles you are granted, what your crisis of faith might look like, and so on. They also come with a set of boons, taboos, and orisons (minor prayers that produce more consistent spell effects)

Divine Inspiration: Once per game session, the mystic can replace a miracle they know with another one of their choice. At the DM's discretion, this may include miracles from other spell lists.


Note on Spellcasting Mechanics: In addition to the [sum] and [dice] mechanics in the core GLOG spellcasting, I'm introducing the [best] mechanic. In this, you take the best result (or the result of your choice) out of any single die you invested in the spell.

Volcano Cultist

Boons: Once per day, you can sacrifice a living creature or a work of art to the flame to ignore your Doubt for one spellcasting roll.
Taboos: You must have a living flame (at least a red-hot coal) in order to cast spells.

Orisons: 
1. Spend 1 hp to create flame. Lights a flammable object on fire, or deals 1d10 damage to a creature on a successful attack roll.2. You can sift ashes to tell what they originally were, even reading text from burned books. 3. You can meditate to ignore fire damage from passive/terrain effects (iron bathhouses, red hot coals, etc)

SPELLS

1. Scorching Rays. You create 1 ray for each die you invest in this spell. Roll to attack with each ray, they each deal [best]+[dice] damage. You can split the attacks among targets, or aim them all at one target, as you see fit.

2. Ash Cloud. Cloud [dice]x10 ft across, deals [dice] fire damage a turn and anyone in the cloud except caster is blinded and must save or spend turn coughing (no action, can still move as normal)

3. Enfeeblement. Range: Touch. 
Target looses [sum] points of Strength. If you invest 3 or more dice, the loss is permanent until the curse is broken- Dispel magic means the strength drain returns at a rate of 1 point per hour, Remove Curse restores it all back immediately.

4. Speak to the Blaze

5. Darkvision 
You or a creature you touch

6. 

7. 

8. 

9. 

10. 

11. 

12. 

13. 

14. Light
Written up here

15. 

16. Speak with Dead

17. Burning Hands
Range: [dice]x10‘ cone  Duration: Instantaneous

Does [best] damage to anything in the cone. Save for half damage. Very flammable things are set on fire. 

22. 



Priest of the Authority

Boons: You don't get dirty, grimy, bloodstained, unless you want to. Blood and mud still splashes on you, it just doesn't stay for very long. You are legally (and magically) allowed to act as a judge, if no other authority is present.Taboos: You cannot break a promise you willingly make. 
Orisons:
1. You can separate things that have been mixed together (grain and sand, milk and wine, etc). This takes a full round for each cubic foot of material being effected.2. When you speak the truth, you can pay 1 hp to have a listener KNOW that you're speaking the truth3. Once per day, for a minute, you can act as if you could see, regardless of darkness, blindness, etc. You can't actually see, but the hand of the Authority guides your steps.

SPELLS

1. Purify
R: 50 ft. T: creature or creatures D: instantaneous
You flush all toxins, poisons, and diseases from up to [best] number of creatures.

2. Sticks to Snakes. 
A bundle of sticks transform into snakes.The snakes attack and take damage as a group. The snakes deal [best] damage and they have [sum] HP. They occupy a [dice]x10 ft square which they share with other creatures, though they count as difficult terrain for any creature that might trip over or get bitten by them, and they can attack up to [dice]x2 number of creatures within that area. They will not attack the caster or very pious churchgoing characters, but otherwise do no differentiate between friend and foe.

3. Abominate
Written up here

4. Command
Written up here

5. Heal
Written up here

6. Sleep
Written up here

7. Gust of Wind
R: 50’ T: a gust of wind D: concentration 
At one [die], use wind to (a) clear away fog or gas, (b) extinguish a fire no larger than a torch, (c) blow all the papers off a desk, (d) with concentration, provide enough of a breeze to power a tiny sailboat. At two [dice], creatures in the area must Save or be pushed in the direction of the wind, up to [best]x5 feet.

8. Zone of Truth

9. Circle of Protection

10. Detect Evil

11. Binding

12. Banishment
Written up here

13. Sending

14. Light


15. Water Walk

Written up here

16. Speak with Dead

Written up here

21. Light
Written up here

22. Hold Person. 
R: 50' T: creature D: concentration, up to [sum] rounds
Target creature or object is locked in place by divine force. You must maintain concentration for this spell to work. Target can breathe and move their eyes, but cannot swim, fly, or perform any other action. If the creature is particularly willful, blasphemous, or a spellcaster, it may Save each round to break free, with a penalty equal to the [dice] you invested.

1d100 Oblique place names

Back in November, the redoubtable noisms of Monsters and Manuals posted about "oblique" place names. I thought the examples liste...